| Literature DB >> 28824900 |
Abstract
When people's knowledge and awareness are the subject of public health research, the meanings applied to the words knowledge and awareness are often unclear. Although frequently used interchangeably without that being problematic, these words sometimes appear to have different intended meanings but those meanings are not made explicit or, despite the meanings having been made explicit, they are not adhered to. It is necessary to overcome obscurities when knowledge and awareness are intended to represent different domains. This occurs when they are compared with each other; it also occurs when knowledge and awareness are assessed separately in relation to such variables as health behavior; physical, psychological, or socioeconomic statuses; gender; age; and ethnic backgrounds. For those particular research ventures, recommendations are made that knowledge be used to refer to information that is, to a greater or lesser extent, detailed and factual, and that awareness be associated with information that is personally relevant. Some suggestions are made, and issues are raised, about how the psychometric foundations for each of those two domains might be established prior to use in empirical research. Adopting the recommendations and suggestions made in this article provides opportunities for greater conceptual and empirical clarity and success.Entities:
Keywords: awareness; epidemiology; health behavior; health beliefs; healthcare; knowledge; public health
Year: 2017 PMID: 28824900 PMCID: PMC5545880 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Dictionary entries concerning knowledge.
| Dictionary | Initial/primary entry | Selected subsequent entries and synonyms |
|---|---|---|
| Cambridge Dictionary | Understanding of or information about a subject that you get from experience or study | Awareness of something: the state of being aware of something |
| Acquaintance with facts, truths, or principles | Awareness, as of a fact or circumstance | |
| The Free Dictionary | The state or fact of knowing | Awareness, consciousness, or familiarity gained by experience or learning |
| Merriam-Webster Dictionary | Information, understanding, or skill that you get from experience or education | Awareness of something: the state of being aware of something |
| Oxford Dictionaries | Facts, information, and skills acquired through experience or education | Awareness or familiarity gained by experience of a fact or situation |
Dictionary entries concerning awareness.
| Dictionary | Initial/primary entry | Selected subsequent entries and synonyms |
|---|---|---|
| Cambridge Dictionary | Knowing that something exists, or understanding of a situation or subject at the present time based on information or experience | Acquaintance, consciousness, knowledge |
| The state or condition of being aware; having knowledge; consciousness | Attentiveness, apprehension, consciousness, familiarity, mindfulness | |
| The Free Dictionary | Having knowledge or discernment of something | Acquaintance with, attention to, awake, consciousness of, knowingness, mindfulness of, self-awareness, sense of danger, sensibility to. Archaic: vigilant, watchful |
| Merriam-Webster Dictionary | Knowing that something (such as a situation, condition, or problem) exists. Archaic: watchful, wary | Awake, conscious, vigilance |
| Oxford Dictionaries | Knowledge or perception of a situation or fact | Appreciation, consciousness, familiarity |
Figure 1Representation of knowledge as a continuum on a single domain.
Figure 2Representation of awareness as a continuum on a single domain.